In this dispute between neighbors, we must decide whether the trial court’s judgment issued after a conventional trial on the merits was final for purposes of appeal. We conclude that it was. The Drennons’ grandchildren were joined as parties due to their shared interest in the subject property, but no claims against the grandchildren were addressed at trial nor were any jury questions submitted on the grandchildren. The grandchildren were not mentioned in the trial court’s judgment, and this raised finality concerns in the court of appeals. Under the
Aldridge
presumption, any judgment following a conventional trial on the merits creates a presumption that the judgment is final for purposes of appeal.
See Ne. Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Aldridge,
Millard and Barbara Vaughn and Paul and Mary Drennon had repeated disputes about water drainage off the Vaughns’ property. The Vaughns sued the Dren-nons for blocking and diverting the natural flow of water off the Vaughn property with a concrete fence, also alleging trespass and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Drennons filed a separate lawsuit against the Vaughns for intentional infliction of emotional distress, and the trial court consolidated the two cases.
*562 The Vaughns’ first amended petition added the Drennons’ grandchildren, Chase Atwood and Taylor Atwood, as defendants, because the Drennons had executed a deed in favor of the Atwoods. The Drennons’ attorney then filed a general denial on behalf of the Atwoods. At trial, the Dren-nons stipulated that there had been a deed reserving a life estate in the Drennons. The Vaughns proceeded with their claims against the Drennons only, based on their understanding that the Drennons remained in sole possession of the property throughout the duration of the events giving rise to the suit. The Vaughns did not pursue any claims against the Atwoods at trial, and they did not request the submission of any jury questions regarding the Atwoods, nor were any given.
The jury found that the Drennons’ fence and diversion of the natural flow of water caused $4,000 in damages to the Vaughns’ property, and that Paul Drennon’s intentional infliction of emotional distress had caused Millard Vaughn $25,000 in damages, but the jury awarded no damages for trespass. The jury also awarded each of the Drennons $25,000 for their emotional distress. The trial court, in its judgment, disregarded the jury’s findings regarding the diversion of the natural flow of water, offset Millard Vaughn’s and Paul Dren-non’s emotional distress damages, and awarded Mary Drennon $25,000. The judgment made no mention of the At-woods.
The Vaughns appealed, and from the outset the court of appeals expressed concern about whether the trial court’s judgment was final. The court requested that the Vaughns produce evidence of jurisdiction before full briefing, which they did, and the court of appeals then notified both parties in a letter that, in its opinion, the Vaughns had established jurisdiction. Nevertheless, the question of finality and jurisdiction was again raised at oral argument. The Vaughns argued in a post-submission letter that the
Aldridge
presumption applied to the trial court’s judgment following a conventional trial on the merits and that, in the alternative, the court of appeals should abate the appeal to allow the trial court to clarify the judgment’s finality or to issue a more definitive judgment. Instead, the court of appeals denied the request for abatement and dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
This is exactly the kind of delay in the appellate process that this Court has sought to avoid in continuously enforcing the
Aldridge
presumption.
See Aldridge,
When a judgment, not intrinsically interlocutory in character, is rendered and entered in a case regularly set for a *563 conventional trial on the merits, no order for a separate trial of issues having been entered ... it will be presumed for appeal purposes that the Court intended to, and did, dispose of all parties legally before it and of all issues made by the pleadings between such parties.
Id.
This presumption arose out of our concern that too often the right to appeal was abridged by judgments that were drafted poorly or were unclear.
See id.
at 895. Therefore, unless a trial court orders a separate trial to resolve a specific issue, there is a presumption that the trial court’s judgment disposes of all claims and issues in the case.
See id.
at 897-98. If there is any doubt as to the judgment’s finality, then “[fjinality must be resolved by a determination of the intention of the court [as] gathered from the language of the decree and the record as a whole, aided on occasion by the conduct of the parties.”
Lehmann,
A judgment need not address every party and claim for it to be a final judgment for purposes of appeal.
See Moritz,
While the court of appeals recognized that the starting point in this case was the
Aldridge
presumption, the court looked to our recent decision in
Crites v. Collins,
Because the trial court’s judgment after a conventional trial on the merits was final for purposes of appeal, we reverse the *564 court of appeals’ judgment dismissing for want of jurisdiction and remand the case to the court of appeals to determine the merits of the Vaughns’ appeal.
